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posted by cmn32480 on Tuesday April 17 2018, @06:04PM   Printer-friendly
from the community-brownout dept.

Here's a month-old article from Politico Magazine about the big business of cloudscale blockchain minery in the better Washington:

Hands on the wheel, eyes squinting against the winter sun, Lauren Miehe eases his Land Rover down the main drag and tells me how he used to spot promising sites to build a bitcoin mine, back in 2013, when he was a freshly arrived techie from Seattle and had just discovered this sleepy rural community.

The attraction then, as now, was the Columbia River, which we can glimpse a few blocks to our left. Bitcoin mining—the complex process in which computers solve a complicated math puzzle to win a stack of virtual currency—uses an inordinate amount of electricity, and thanks to five hydroelectric dams that straddle this stretch of the river, about three hours east of Seattle, miners could buy that power more cheaply here than anywhere else in the nation. Long before locals had even heard the words "cryptocurrency" or "blockchain," Miehe and his peers realized that this semi-arid agricultural region known as the Mid-Columbia Basin was the best place to mine bitcoin in America—and maybe the world.

[...] As bitcoin's soaring price has drawn in thousands of new players worldwide, the strange math at the heart of this cryptocurrency has grown steadily more complicated. Generating a single bitcoin takes a lot more servers than it used to—and a lot more power. Today, a half-megawatt mine, Miehe says, "is nothing." The commercial miners now pouring into the valley are building sites with tens of thousands of servers and electrical loads of as much as 30 megawatts, or enough to power a neighborhood of 13,000 homes. And in the arms race that cryptocurrency mining has become, even these operations will soon be considered small-scale. Miehe knows of substantially larger mining projects in the basin backed by out-of-state investors from Wall Street, Europe and Asia whose prospecting strategy, as he puts it, amounts to "running around with a checkbook just trying to get in there and establish scale."

It's pretty long for an internet article but it's got pictures.


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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by All Your Lawn Are Belong To Us on Tuesday April 17 2018, @09:43PM

    by All Your Lawn Are Belong To Us (6553) on Tuesday April 17 2018, @09:43PM (#668314) Journal

    ... It's a Gold Rush. And when the Rush drops..... Well, Bitcoin doesn't have intrinsic value nor jewelry value. There may always be some players, but Bitcoin will make more people (miners, traders) poor than rich.

    Oh, but you know who almost always made money in the Gold Rush? Those selling pickaxes, sluices (and lumber etc.), hot meals and a motel room, and saloons. Basically anyone selling needed or needful services to those who struck it rich.... and to hell with the masses who stayed poor. (Yeah, I saw the "wholesaler" who went out of business in TFA and some of them do, too. But I think the point still stands.)

    Not my thought originally. Heinlein, maybe?

    And interesting find and article, especially since I had family living in Wenatchee up until this year. Nice town and sad if it gets truly gentrified.

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